PDF | 26.7 MB | 654 pages | English | © Oxford University Press |
2018
Part I • Introduction and Overview 1. Introduction:
Toward an Interdisciplinary Science of Spontaneous Thought 3
Kieran C. R.
Fox and Kalina Christoff
Part II • Theoretical Perspectives
2. Why the Mind Wanders: How Spontaneous Thoughts Default Variability May
Support Episodic Efficiency and Semantic Optimization n Caitlin Mills, Arianne
Herrera-Bennett, Myrthe Faber, and Kalina Christoff
3. An
Exploration/Exploitation Trade-off Between Mind-Wandering and Goal-Directed
Thinking 23
Chandra S. Sripada
4. When the Absence of Reasoning Breeds
Meaning: Metacognitive Appraisals of Spontaneous Thought 35
Carey K
Morewedge and Daniella M. Kupor
5. The Mind Wanders with Ease: Low
Motivational Intensity Is an Essential Quality of Mind-Wandering 47
Dylan
Stan and Kalina Christoff
6. How Does the Brains Spontaneous Activity
Generate Our Thoughts?
The Spatio temporal Theory of Task-Unrelated Thought
(STTT) 55 Georg Northoff
7. Investigating the Elements of Thought: Toward a
Component Process Account of Spontaneous Cognition 71
Jonathan Smallwood,
Daniel Margulies, Boris C. Bernhardt, and Elizabeth Jefferies
Part
III • Philosophical, Evolutionary, and Historical Perspectives 8. The
Philosophy of Mind-Wandering 87 Zachary C. Irving and Evan Thompson
9. Why
Is Mind-Wandering Interesting for Philosophers? 97
Thomas Metzinger
10.
Spontaneity in Evolution, Learning, Creativity, and Free
Will: Spontaneous
Variation in Four Selectionist Phenomena 113
Dean Keith Simonton
11. How
Does the Waking and Sleeping Brain Produce Spontaneous Thought and Imagery, and
Why? 123
John S. Antrohus
12. Spontaneous Thinking in Creative Lives:
Building Connections Between Science and History 133
Alex Soojung-Kim Pang
Part IV • Mind-Wandering and Daydreaming 13. The Neuroscience
of Spontaneous Thought: An Evolving Interdisciplinary Field 143
Jessica R.
Andrews-Hanna, Zachary C. Irving, Kieran C. R. Fox,
R. Nathan Spreng, and
Kalina Christoff
14. Neural Origins of Self-Generated Thought: Insights from
Intracranial Electrical Stimulation and Recordings in Humans
Kieran C. R.
Fox
15. Mind-Wandering and Self-Referential Thought 181
Arnaud
DArgembeau
16. Phenomenological Properties of Mind-Wandering and
Daydreaming:
A Historical Overview and Functional Correlates 193
David
Stawarczyk
17. Spontaneous Thought and Goal Pursuit: From Functions Such as
Planning to Dysfunctions Such as Rumination 215
Eric Klinger, Igor
Marchetti, and Ernst H. W. Koster
18. Unraveling What’s on Our Minds: How
Different Types of Mind-Wandering Affect Cognition and Behavior 233 Claire M.
Zedelius and Jonathan W. Schooler
19. Electrophysiological Evidence for
Attentional Decoupling during Mind-Wandering 249
Julia W. Y. Kam and Todd C.
Handy
20. Mind-Wandering in Educational Settings 259 Jeffrey D. Wammes, Paul
Seli, and Daniel Smilek
Part V • Creativity and Insight 21.
Interacting Brain Networks Underlying Creative Cognition and Artistic
Performance 275
Roger E. Beaty and Rex E. Jung
22. Spontaneous and
Controlled Processes in Creative Cognition 285 Mathias Benedek and Emanuel Jauk
23. Wandering and Direction in Creative Production 299 Charles Dobson
24. Flow as Spontaneous Thought: Insight and Implicit Learning 309 John
Vervaeke, Leo Ferraro, and Arianne Herrera-Bennett
Part VI • Sleep,
Dreaming, and Memory 27. Dreaming Is an Intensified Form of
Mind-Wandering, Based in an Augmented Portions of the Default Network 355
G.
William Domhoff
28. Neural Correlates of Self-Generated Imagery and
Cognition Throughout the Sleep Cycle 371
Kieran C. R. Fox and Manesh Girn
29. Spontaneous Thought, Insight, and Control in Lucid Dreams 385 Jennifer
M. Windt and Ursula Voss
30. Microdream Neurophenomenology: A Paradigm for
Dream Neuroscience 411
Tore Nielsen
31. Sleep Paralysis: Phenomenology,
Neurophysiology, and Treatment 435 Elizaveta Solomonova
32. Dreaming and
Waking Thought as a Reflection of Memory Consolidation 457
Erin J. Wamsley
33. Involuntary Autobiographical Memories: Spontaneous Recollections of the
Past 469
John H. Mace
Part VII • Clinical Contexts, Contemplative
Traditions, and Altered States of Consciousness 34. Potential Clinical
Benefits and Risks of Spontaneous Thought: Unconstrained Attention as a Way into
and a Way out
of Psychological Disharmony 479
Dylan Stan and Kalina
Christoff
35. Candidate Mechanisms of Spontaneous Cognition as Revealed by
Dementia Syndromes 493
Claire O'Callaghan and Muireann Irish
36.
Rumination Is a Sticky Form of Spontaneous Thought 509 Elizabeth DuPre and R.
Nathan Spreng
37. Pain and Spontaneous Thought 521 Aaron Kucyi
38.
Spontaneous Thought in Contemplative Traditions 529 Halvor Eifring
39.
Catching the Wandering Mind: Meditation as a Window into Spontaneous Thought 539
Wendy Hasenkamp
40. Spontaneous Mental Experiences in Extreme and
Unusual Environments 553
Peter Suedfeld, A. Dennis Rank, and Marek Malus
41. Cultural Neurophenomenology of Psychedelic Thought: Guiding the
“Unconstrained” Mind Through Ritual Context 573
Michael Lifshitz, Eli Oda
Sheiner, and Laurence J. Kirmayer
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